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      TV Review: Jason Momoaโ€™s โ€˜Seeโ€™ on Apple TV Plus

      Apple TV Plus's dystopian drama strands Jason Momoa in an uninteresting wasteland.

      TV Review: 'See'
      Apple

      Itโ€™s perhaps to be applauded that, at its launch, Apple TV Plus doesnโ€™t have a genre tentpole show based on an established intellectual property โ€” its equivalent, say, of โ€œThe Mandalorian,โ€ the โ€œStar Warsโ€-universe series that will serve as further inducement for Disney Plus subscribers. Instead, Apple is trusting a mix of unfamiliar properties to win the day, a victory for those who say that repetitious franchise work is sapping Hollywood of innovation.

      And yet. โ€œSee,โ€ a pure genre exercise originating from the mind of writer Steven Knight, sorely craves the sort of pure structural integrity that source material can provide. Spiraling away from narrative control as its first three episodes unreel, this series, about a post-apocalyptic future in which nearly everyone is blind, wastes the time of Jason Momoa and Alfre Woodard, among others, on a story that starts from a position of fun, giddy strangeness and drags itself forward at a lugubrious pace. Source material would have provided structure (which many original properties have, but this one certainly does not). It also might have provided a control of tone. Knight, director/EP Francis Lawrence, and showrunner Dan Shotz have made a show whose elaborate look and grave tone aim for โ€œGame of Thronesโ€ but whose content is lower of brow and, sadly, of quality.

      One issue: The show has bound up Momoa. Here, the actor plays Baba Voss, a chief of a tribe in a future where generations upon generations of humans have been born with sight only being a myth. The birth of two children, who age up early in the showโ€™s run from babies to teens (played by Archie Madekwe and Nesta Cooper). Heโ€™s dutiful in the extreme, and rigid, uncomfortable as lead or just having to carry such rigorously dumb dialogue. (By contrast, in his first-season supporting role on โ€œGame of Thrones,โ€ Momoa was having the time of his life, deployed as he was to act out, big and broad.) Here, Momoa must alternate silent stoicism with โ€œXenaโ€-level sword-and-sorcery dialogue or with violence so extreme that even hardcore fans will admit it loses whatever might have been its appeal. In one scene, generally quite nicely choreographed and interesting to look at, Momoa concludes the action by forcing his adversary to swallow a sword.

      Thereโ€™s a question of taste here โ€” how many people are going to want to sit through this? Thereโ€™s also a certain utilitarian question. Too much of โ€œSeeโ€ makes no sense from the perspective of a series about blindness. (Itโ€™s worth noting that unlike, say, โ€œA Quiet Place,โ€ the masterfully sound-edited film about a deaf girl and her family who must live in silence, this project makes no real attempt to show an inside perspective on what it would be like to be blind.) For every well-drawn touch, like a character snapping her fingers to draw a visitor to her, there are beats that run afoul of even a casual viewerโ€™s common sense. For all that the sound design is indeed gruesome, who is Momoaโ€™s Voss trying to impress by so showily murdering an adversary if no one can see the carnage? Why does an evil queen (Sylvia Hoeks) ask her subjects to โ€œBehold!โ€ her killing of gagged prisoners who cannot effectively communicate their distress to the sightless anyhow? Elsewhere, Madekweโ€™s and Cooperโ€™s teens, the only two sighted people in the world and the object of much pursuit, teach themselves to read with the encouragement of their blind peers. If sight really was treated as something that had never existed, how did the blind even know what a book was โ€” and how are the teens able to so quickly pick up not just the skill of literacy but the parsing of cultural context to understand โ€œTo Kill a Mockingbirdโ€ and โ€œ1984,โ€ which they read together?

      These questions feel ungenerous taken together as a barrage; the viewer ought, perhaps, to trust in the show to resolve its story. But nothing in โ€œSeeโ€ provides a basis for that trust. It is at best a fairly lazy copy of more effective genre entertainmentsโ€™ tone, with messy and underbaked story filling in the gaps. Itโ€™s hard to know what โ€œSeeโ€ adds to a new streamer off the bat โ€” perhaps the stardom of Momoa, perhaps the mere fact of a fantasy projectโ€™s existence. But it doesnโ€™t lend the sense of a quality filter, and with so few shows available at launch, that doesnโ€™t look good.

      TV Review: Jason Momoaโ€™s โ€˜Seeโ€™ on Apple TV Plus

      Apple TV Plus, Eight episodes (three screened for review).

      • Production:Executive Producers: Steven Knight, Francis Lawrence, Peter Chernin, Jenno Topping, Dan Shotz, Kristen Campo
      • Crew:
      • Cast:Jason Momoa, Alfre Woodard, Hera Hilmar, Sylvia Hoeks , Christian Camargo, Archie Madekwe, Nesta Cooper, Yadira Guevara-Prip.
      • Music By:

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